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Edward Hand's Rock Ford Museum

881 Rockford Rd, Lancaster, PA 17602, USA

Pennsylvania

state

PA - Lancaster

county

PA - Philadelphia

city

MUSEUM

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TICKET INFO

Historic Rock Ford, comprising the General Edward Hand Mansion and the John J. Snyder, Jr. Gallery of Early Lancaster County Decorative Arts, is located in southeastern Lancaster, Pennsylvania. Although the property is surrounded by Lancaster County Central Park, it is privately owned and operated by the Rock Ford Foundation, a not-for-profit organization. This house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on November 21, 1976.

SITE FEATURES

Surviving Structures

On this site...

Irish-American soldier Edward Hand bought the land on which the plantation was built in two transactions, first purchasing 160 acres in 1785 and later buying an additional 17 acres in 1792. The Georgian-style brick mansion was built in 1794, and its architecture has since remained largely unchanged. All four floors conform to the same plan, a center hall and four corner rooms, as was typical of the period. Historic Rock Ford stands on the banks of the Conestoga River, 1 mile southeast of the center of Lancaster.

HOME

EST. 1794

Following medical training at Trinity College, Dublin, Hand was enlisted as Surgeon's Mate with the 18th Royal Irish Regiment of Foot and sent to garrison Fort Pitt in America. He resigned from British service in 1774 and came to Lancaster to practice medicine. In 1775, Edward Hand married Katharine ("Kitty") Ewing, the niece of Jasper Yeates, set up a household in the city. Hand joined the Continental Army as Lt. Colonel of the 1st Battalion of Pennsylvania Riflemen in July of 1775. He led troops at Boston, Long Island, White Plains and Trenton, becoming Adjutant General to Washington in 1781.


Katharine was served by enslaved persons of African descent: a woman, Sue, a girl, Bet and a boy, Bob, who was entrusted to convey goods and money over long distances between General Hand and Kitty in Lancaster. After the war, Katherine Hand gave birth to five more children.


Hand returned to Lancaster at the War’s end and entered politics as a Federalist. He served in Congress, the Pennsylvania General Assembly and was elected Burgess of Lancaster. Edward Hand and his family moved to Rock Ford in 1794. The 1800 U.S. Census tells of fourteen members of the household. In addition to his immediate family, this list likely includes Katharine Hand’s mother, Edward Hand’s secretary, a free white laborer and one enslaved person, Frank. Frank, a person of African descent, was a farm hand who escaped shortly before Edward Hand’s death in 1802. Katharine Hand remained at Rock Ford with several of her children after her husband’s death. Lancaster County tax records indicate that she enslaved one unnamed person of African descent as well. Katharine Hand died at Rock Ford in 1805.

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HISTORIC PEOPLE

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George Washington

Commander-in-Chief

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Edward Hand

Colonel

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